The former Toronto Blue Jays and Philadelphia Phillies ace died at 12:19 p.m., Tuesday off the coast of New Port Richey, Fla., when his private plane crashed in the Gulf of Mexico about a quarter-mile off shore.

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Douglas R. Clifford | Tampa Bay Times via AP

Plane pulled from water

Halladay’s Icon A5 plane, found Tuesday upside down in four feet over water, was brought to shore on Wednesday.

“It looked like a high-energy impact,” National Transportation Safety Board investigator Noreen Price said during a news conference said. “All the pieces were there. Most everything was attached.”

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Douglas R. Clifford | Tampa Bay Times via AP

Data recorders found

There was no voice recorder on Halladay’s plane, but it had two data recorders and both were retrieved.

Information that likely will come from the data recorders include GPS location, how fast the plane was moving and the altitude of the aircraft, National Transportation Safety Board investigator Noreen Price said.